Book Image

Webflow by Example

By : Ali Rushdan Tariq
Book Image

Webflow by Example

By: Ali Rushdan Tariq

Overview of this book

Webflow is a modern no-code website-builder that enables you to rapidly design and build production-scale responsive websites. Webflow by Example is a practical, project-based, and beginner-friendly guide to understanding and using Webflow to efficiently build and launch responsive websites from scratch. Complete with hands-on tutorials, projects, and self-assessment questions, this easy-to-follow guide will take you through modern web development principles and help you to apply them efficiently using Webflow. You’ll also get to grips with modern responsive web development and understand how to take advantage of the power and flexibility of Webflow. The book will guide you through a real-life project where you will build a fully responsive and dynamic website from scratch. You will learn how to add animations and interactions, customize experiences for users, and more. Finally, the book covers important steps and best practices for making your website ready for production, including SEO optimization and how to publish and package the website. By the end of this Webflow book, you will have gained the skills you need to build modern responsive websites from scratch without any code.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Getting Started with Webflow
5
Section 2: Building a Mobile Responsive Landing Page with Webflow
11
Section 3: Building a Dynamic Website with Webflow CMS
16
Section 4: Additional Topics

What is a CMS?

At the heart of it, a CMS allows us to create and manage content on websites. It can be done either by one person or a team of people. Sometimes, some of the control of content creation and management can even be given to the website's visitors.

Let's take an example we've seen before: CNN.com. This news publication website features constantly updating content multiple times a day, every day. These hundreds and thousands of pages would be too cumbersome to build from scratch daily.

This is where a CMS steps in. With a CMS, the content publishers of CNN can simply focus on writing the content itself; the CMS is then used to publish the right content to the right categories at the right time. And because the format of each of the pages has already been defined, the CMS just replicates those as new pages, greatly simplifying the process.

But you don't need to have thousands of pages of constantly updated content to want to use a CMS.

Imagine...